An Approximation to the Configuration of Spain's Audiovisual Media In
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Revista Latina de Comunicación Social # 069 – Pages 593 to 617 Research | DOI: 10.4185/RLCS-2014-1026en | ISSN 1138-5820 | Year 2014 How to cite this article in bibliographies / References R Reig, R Mancinas-Chávez, AI Nogales-Bocio (2014): “An approximation to the configuration of Spain’s audiovisual media in 2014. The case of Canal Sur TV”. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social , 69, pp. 593 to 617. http://www.revistalatinacs.org/069/paper/1026_US/29en.html DOI: 10.4185/RLCS-2014-1026en An approximation to the configuration of Spain’s audiovisual media in 2014. The case of Canal Sur TV R Reig [ CV ] Universidad de Sevilla, Spain, [email protected] R Mancinas-Chávez [ CV ] Universidad de Sevilla, Spain, [email protected] A I Nogales-Bocio [ CV ] Universidad de Sevilla, Spain, [email protected] Abstract Introduction. Based on the analysis of the most important developments in the configuration of the Spanish and Andalusian public audiovisual sector up until the summer of 2014, this article proves that the current Spanish media landscape is characterised by concentration and, at the same time, by the diversification and internationalisation of capital. Method. The study is based on the structural approach, which involves the examination of the Political Economy of Communication, Information and Culture. Results and conclusions. The study has confirmed, once again, the existence of a hidden network of interests that involve media and non-media-related business groups. The article argues in favour of the development of a public television system that is properly managed as a public service, and contends that the current characteristics of the private television industry do not fully fulfil the rights of the Spanish citizens. Keywords Historical perspective; context; diversification of capital; outsourcing; politicisation. Contents 1. Introduction. 2. Hypothesis. 3. Method: structure and ownership. 4. Results. Outline of the configuration of the Spanish audiovisual media sector (up until the summer of 2014). 5. Results. The case of Canal Sur TV: an approximation. 6. Conclusions. 7. Notes. 8. List of references. 9. List of news articles. Translation by CA Martínez Arcos , Ph.D. (Universidad Autónoma de Tamaulipas) http://www.revistalatinacs.org/069/paper/1026_US/29en.html Página 593 Revista Latina de Comunicación Social # 069 – Pages 593 to 617 Research | DOI: 10.4185/RLCS-2014-1026en | ISSN 1138-5820 | Year 2014 1. Introduction To approach its object of study, this article takes into consideration the two key factors needed to understand, in general terms, any subject matter: the historical perspective and the context in which the event takes place. This article offers a chronological outline of the way the audiovisual media sector has been configured in Spain, taking into account, first, the descriptions offered by our book titled Los dueños del periodismo (“The owners of journalism”, Reig, 2011), whose outline of the configuration of the Spanish media system covers from 1923, when Radio emerged in Spain, up to 2011, and, second, a recent study conducted recently to obtain an updated view of the situation of the audiovisual media sector up until the summer of 2014, when this article was written. In the last three years there have been important events that must be taken into account. The context and meanings of the past and current developments will also be addressed in this article. The description of the event and its meaning involve the aforementioned cognitive factors: the historical perspective and the context. The outline of the configuration of the Spanish media sector will be based on the premises of the structural approach which, on this occasion, will focus on providing an overview of the management, communication policies and contents related to the public television sector in Spain. Due to our geographic proximity with Andalusia, the study will focus on the programming of Radio Televisión de Andalusia (RTVA) –and Canal Sur TV in particular–, which is one of the most popular regional TV networks. As we will see later, in 2013 and in June 2014, TV3, Aragon TV, TVG, Canal Sur TV and ETB were, in this order, the most popular regional networks [1] . In order to facilitate the understanding of this study, our exposition follows a simple style in the form of notes. 2. Hypothesis The study of the development and, above all, current state of the audiovisual media landscape in Spain offers a clear example of the articulation of the different production sectors. There are no “pure communication” entrepreneurs but production agents that diversify their work towards all those sectors that can afford them any type of benefits, whether economic or in terms of influences. In addition, politics and the trends of the global market, i.e. the political economy, have a clear effect on both in public and private audiovisual media. 3. Method: structure and ownership To facilitate the understanding of this section we will articulate various elements derived from the configuration of the Spanish audiovisual sector, and of public television in particular. Based on the premises of the aforementioned structural approach, we believe it is necessary to take into account significant events related to the private audiovisual sector in order to contextualise our object of study. The theoretical foundation of the structural method is broad but at this point the description of its basic pillars suffices to understand it. The rector of the Complutense University of Madrid, and Professor of Applied Economics, Carlos Berzosa, in the foreword of a book dedicated to the also Economist, Professor and writer José Luis Sampedro (Berzosa, 2009, Sampedro, 2009), points out that: http://www.revistalatinacs.org/069/paper/1026_US/29en.html Página 594 Revista Latina de Comunicación Social # 069 – Pages 593 to 617 Research | DOI: 10.4185/RLCS-2014-1026en | ISSN 1138-5820 | Year 2014 “In view of the serious problems confronting the world today, and despite the progress made, structural analysis is essential to learn to ask the right questions and try to find the right answers when it comes to understand what is going on.” Sampedro is a methodological and empirical Economist and when he applies the structural analysis to understand what is taking pace he indicates: “With the support of more independent authors, I stand by my opinion about the decline of the system. It is true that the law offers equality, [but it is] completely false given the unfair distribution of the wealth of the planet among its inhabitants, [this] inequality has not been corrected throughout the decades in which the abolition of poverty has been promoted. It is also true that the system proclaims democratic statements, but reality confronts us with oligarchic organisations that maintain their power thanks to the dominance of the media, with the subsequent manipulation of the public opinion, and justify themselves with the ideologies developed by the intellectuals at their service. (…). And with regards to freedom, one just has to take a look at the same media companies to immediately wonder who their real beneficiaries are.” Sampedro combines several elements in his reflection: law, economics, society, power, a media world articulated with power and the economy, ideology, and philosophical concepts such as the freedom. This is a structural method of analysis. To be able to understand what happens to us at the individual and ‘global’ levels (which interact with each other) we need this method, which is precisely the one almost always ignored by the media and even the programmes of study. The result is functional illiteracy. Poet Luis García Montero (2009) has strongly criticised the fusion of the economy politics and information. “One of the biggest attacks against democracy, even greater than the barbaric aggression against the twin towers, is the attack that the powerful economic groups execute when they humiliate the veracity of information with their commercial and political interests.” We are facing what Marciel Detienne calls a comparatist (in Checa Godoy, 2008), which is peculiar to the structural approach: “As it moves forward, the comparatist gets the feeling he is discovering a set of possibilities, whose conceptual use allows him to highlighting unique elements (...). The comparatist performs a logical dismantling that allows him to discover the existing articulations between two or three elements [and] to isolate the micro-configurations that allow him to see the differences more and more sharply and contiguously.” In today’s world –as we all know very well– the application of the structural method involves identifying a network of articulated interests that take us from public to the private spheres and vice versa, and from the local and the regional to the national and from the national to the international and vice versa. It is an inductive-deductive dynamic that involves connections with sectors that are not related the communications industry, in general, and to the audiovisual media in particular. This is known as media concentration but this is a type that also involves the diversification of capital (Reig, 2010). This study exemplifies the previous arguments, which can be summarised as follows: the media power has increasingly been concentrated in few hands, and at the same time, shareholders from other production sectors have rapidly become part of the boards of directors of the media and audiovisual groups while the media groups have also gone beyond their theoretical social raison d'être. This market tendency is common around the world, and has been stimulated, de facto , by the http://www.revistalatinacs.org/069/paper/1026_US/29en.html Página 595 Revista Latina de Comunicación Social # 069 – Pages 593 to 617 Research | DOI: 10.4185/RLCS-2014-1026en | ISSN 1138-5820 | Year 2014 political power despite the efforts made by the later to limit the excessive concentrations of media power. The immediate origins of this trend date back to the 19 th century, and especially to the end of this century.